Printing "I'm Asleep..."

I was touched by the story of Paddy and friends playing in New York, and I’d like to learn the tune. When I print it, though, it’s missing the last measure on each line. Any way I can fiddle with the format and make it fit?

Thanks.

Tom

I printed in landscape without problem.

Joe

Try this link at JC’s

http://trillian.mit.edu/~jc/cgi/abc/findtune?P=I'm+asleep

Mark

You may be able to set the print to “fit to page”. What browser/version are you using?

This is an updated version sent to me by Peter Laben.

[ This Message was edited by: DaleWisely on 2001-10-16 08:24 ]

Dear gods, you certainly know how to make a tune look intimidating :slight_smile:
I’ll continue with the simple ones for now.

Arnout

Thanks, that did it!

Tom

As an added note, “I’m Asleep” is also
contained in ‘Ireland’s Best Slow Airs’
pg. 39 under the title "Ta me mo Chodladh’.
The song narrative indicates the earliest
verson of this air appears in ‘Musik for
Allan Ramsey’s Collection of Scots Songs’
(Edingburgh, 1725). Whether its origin is Irish or Lowland Scottish is open to debate.
Bunting got it from Hempson, the harpist, in 1792.

Are the two manuscripts posted by Dale (one in another thread) really different versions of the same air? I don’t see much similarity, other than the name.

–Jay

The version posted above is the version from Tadg Crowley’s Tutor for the Uilleann pipes, published in 1936. This is the common version played these days. I posted it to Dale for that reason. The tune was written for the pipes, that’s why a second stave with regulator chords is included, you can ignore that. Ornamentation is written for the chanter but should go well on the whistle too (allthough some would argue a heavy influence of the Highland pipe ornamentation is noticable).
This would be a version very close to the Maloney would have played.